MMWR Surveill Summ. 2023 Mar 24;72(1):1-15. doi: 10.15585/mmwr.ss7201a1.
PROBLEM/CONDITION: Autism spectrum disorder (ASD).
The Autism and Developmental Disabilities Monitoring Network is an active surveillance program that estimates prevalence and characteristics of ASD and monitors timing of ASD identification among children aged 4 and 8 years. In 2020, a total of 11 sites (located in Arizona, Arkansas, California, Georgia, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, New Jersey, Tennessee, Utah, and Wisconsin) conducted surveillance of ASD among children aged 4 and 8 years and suspected ASD among children aged 4 years. Surveillance included children who lived in the surveillance area at any time during 2020. Children were classified as having ASD if they ever received 1) an ASD diagnostic statement in an evaluation, 2) a special education classification of autism (eligibility), or 3) an ASD International Classification of Diseases (ICD) code (revisions 9 or 10). Children aged 4 years were classified as having suspected ASD if they did not meet the case definition for ASD but had a documented qualified professional's statement indicating a suspicion of ASD. This report focuses on children aged 4 years in 2020 compared with children aged 8 years in 2020.
For 2020, ASD prevalence among children aged 4 years varied across sites, from 12.7 per 1,000 children in Utah to 46.4 in California. The overall prevalence was 21.5 and was higher among boys than girls at every site. Compared with non-Hispanic White children, ASD prevalence was 1.8 times as high among Hispanic, 1.6 times as high among non-Hispanic Black, 1.4 times as high among Asian or Pacific Islander, and 1.2 times as high among multiracial children. Among the 58.3% of children aged 4 years with ASD and information on intellectual ability, 48.5% had an IQ score of ≤70 on their most recent IQ test or an examiner's statement of intellectual disability. Among children with a documented developmental evaluation, 78.0% were evaluated by age 36 months. Children aged 4 years had a higher cumulative incidence of ASD diagnosis or eligibility by age 48 months compared with children aged 8 years at all sites; risk ratios ranged from 1.3 in New Jersey and Utah to 2.0 in Tennessee. In the 6 months before the March 2020 COVID-19 pandemic declaration by the World Health Organization, there were 1,593 more evaluations and 1.89 more ASD identifications per 1,000 children aged 4 years than children aged 8 years received 4 years earlier. After the COVID-19 pandemic declaration, this pattern reversed: in the 6 months after pandemic onset, there were 217 fewer evaluations and 0.26 fewer identifications per 1,000 children aged 4 years than children aged 8 years received 4 years earlier. Patterns of evaluation and identification varied among sites, but there was not recovery to pre-COVID-19 pandemic levels by the end of 2020 at most sites or overall. For 2020, prevalence of suspected ASD ranged from 0.5 (California) to 10.4 (Arkansas) per 1,000 children aged 4 years, with an increase from 2018 at five sites (Arizona, Arkansas, Maryland, New Jersey, and Utah). Demographic and cognitive characteristics of children aged 4 years with suspected ASD were similar to children aged 4 years with ASD.
A wide range of prevalence of ASD by age 4 years was observed, suggesting differences in early ASD identification practices among communities. At all sites, cumulative incidence of ASD by age 48 months among children aged 4 years was higher compared with children aged 8 years in 2020, indicating improvements in early identification of ASD. Higher numbers of evaluations and rates of identification were evident among children aged 4 years until the COVID-19 pandemic onset in 2020. Sustained lower levels of ASD evaluations and identification seen at a majority of sites after the pandemic onset could indicate disruptions in typical practices in evaluations and identification for health service providers and schools through the end of 2020. Sites with more recovery could indicate successful strategies to mitigate service interruption, such as pivoting to telehealth approaches for evaluation.
From 2016 through February of 2020, ASD evaluation and identification among the cohort of children aged 4 years was outpacing ASD evaluation and identification 4 years earlier (from 2012 until March 2016) among the cohort of children aged 8 years in 2020 . From 2016 to March 2020, ASD evaluation and identification among the cohort of children aged 4 years was outpacing that among children aged 8 years in 2020 from 2012 until March 2016. The disruptions in evaluation that coincided with the start of the COVID-19 pandemic and the increase in prevalence of suspected ASD in 2020 could have led to delays in ASD identification and interventions. Communities could evaluate the impact of these disruptions as children in affected cohorts age and consider strategies to mitigate service disruptions caused by future public health emergencies.
问题/状况:自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)。
2020 年。
自闭症和发育障碍监测网络是一个主动监测项目,用于估计 ASD 的流行率和特征,并监测儿童在 4 岁和 8 岁时 ASD 的识别时间。2020 年,共有 11 个地点(位于亚利桑那州、阿肯色州、加利福尼亚州、佐治亚州、马里兰州、明尼苏达州、密苏里州、新泽西州、田纳西州、犹他州和威斯康星州)对 4 岁和 8 岁儿童的 ASD 和 4 岁儿童的疑似 ASD 进行监测。监测包括在 2020 年期间居住在监测区域内的任何时间的儿童。如果儿童曾接受过以下情况之一的评估:1)ASD 诊断声明;2)特殊教育自闭症分类(合格);或 3)ASD 国际疾病分类(ICD)代码(修订版 9 或 10),则被认为患有 ASD。如果儿童不符合 ASD 的病例定义,但有合格专业人员的书面声明表明存在 ASD 的怀疑,则被认为患有疑似 ASD。本报告重点关注 2020 年 4 岁儿童与 2020 年 8 岁儿童的比较。
2020 年,4 岁儿童的 ASD 患病率在不同地点之间有所差异,从犹他州的每 1000 名儿童 12.7 例到加利福尼亚州的每 1000 名儿童 46.4 例。总体患病率为 21.5%,且在每个地点男孩的患病率均高于女孩。与非西班牙裔白人儿童相比,西班牙裔儿童的 ASD 患病率是其 1.8 倍,非西班牙裔黑人儿童是其 1.6 倍,亚洲或太平洋岛民儿童是其 1.4 倍,多种族儿童是其 1.2 倍。在有 ASD 信息且有智力能力的 4 岁儿童中,48.5%的儿童在最近的智商测试中或评估人员的智力残疾声明中智商得分≤70。在有记录的发育评估中,78.0%的儿童在 36 个月时接受评估。与 8 岁儿童相比,所有地点的 4 岁儿童在 48 个月时 ASD 诊断或合格的累积发病率更高;风险比范围从新泽西州和犹他州的 1.3 到田纳西州的 2.0。在世界卫生组织宣布 2020 年 3 月 COVID-19 大流行之前的 6 个月内,每 1000 名 4 岁儿童的评估次数比 4 年前 8 岁儿童多 1593 次,ASD 识别次数多 1.89 次。在 COVID-19 大流行宣布之后,这种模式发生了逆转:在大流行开始后的 6 个月内,每 1000 名 4 岁儿童的评估次数比 4 年前 8 岁儿童少 217 次,ASD 识别次数少 0.26 次。各地点的评估和识别模式各不相同,但在 2020 年底,大多数地点或整体并未恢复到 COVID-19 大流行前的水平。2020 年,疑似 ASD 的患病率为每 1000 名儿童 0.5(加利福尼亚州)至 10.4(阿肯色州),五个地点(亚利桑那州、阿肯色州、马里兰州、新泽西州和犹他州)的患病率有所增加。疑似 ASD 的 4 岁儿童的人口统计学和认知特征与 4 岁儿童的 ASD 相似。
观察到 4 岁儿童的 ASD 患病率存在广泛差异,这表明社区之间的早期 ASD 识别实践存在差异。在所有地点,与 2020 年 8 岁儿童相比,4 岁儿童在 48 个月时的 ASD 累积发病率均较高,这表明 ASD 的早期识别有所改善。在 COVID-19 大流行开始之前,4 岁儿童的评估次数和识别率明显更高。在大流行开始后的大多数地点,ASD 评估和识别率持续下降,这可能表明医疗服务提供者和学校在评估和识别方面的常规做法中断,直到 2020 年底。恢复率较高的地点可能表明成功实施了缓解服务中断的策略,例如转向远程医疗评估方法。
从 2016 年到 2020 年 2 月,与 2020 年 8 岁儿童相比,4 岁儿童的 ASD 评估和识别速度超过了 2012 年至 2020 年 3 月期间 8 岁儿童的 ASD 评估和识别速度。从 2016 年到 2020 年 3 月,与 2012 年至 2020 年 3 月期间 8 岁儿童的 ASD 评估和识别速度相比,4 岁儿童的 ASD 评估和识别速度有所加快。COVID-19 大流行开始和 2020 年疑似 ASD 患病率增加导致 ASD 识别和干预延迟。受影响的群体中儿童年龄的增加可能会使社区评估这些干扰的影响,并考虑减轻未来公共卫生紧急事件造成的服务中断的策略。